Little Brown 10 February 2022 My thanks to the publishers for my copy of this book |
π My Review..
Although rurally isolated, the Derbyshire village of Eyam did not escape the pestilence when it arrived from London in 1665 and for those who called this rural backwater home it was to be a time of great fear and isolation. Isabel Frith is the village midwife whose interaction with Wulfric, the belligerent, and deeply religious, village apothecary, is fraught with challenge and distrust.
Caught in the middle is Wulfric's daughter, Mae, who only wishes to be allowed to work alongside her father, using the medicinal skills her deceased mother passed on to her. Wulfric, however, has little time for his daughter, nor of the secrets which swirl and scatter around him and which place Mae in as much danger from her father as from the plague which steals over them. That there is no love lost between Wulfric and Isabel is obvious from the offset, and with accusations of witchcraft screaming in the air, the deadly secret which festers between them is set to destroy one, or other, of them.
Well researched, and wonderfully atmospheric, we imagine the desperation of those caught by the disease in a time when the use of plants and herbal remedies stood little chance against such a fearsome contagion. What happened to the villagers of Eyam in the momentous year of the plague is well documented, their self imposed isolation in order to safe the neighbouring villages is as admirable today as it was then, no doubt saving the lives of many people in the neighbouring communities.
The Hemlock Cure brings history, and the village of Eyam, alive in a very special way.
Best Read with ... fresh bread, sweet with honey and a jug of really strong ale.
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